Credit Pipeline

August 11th, 2016 6:31 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT PIPELINE: Westpac 5-Part Deal Expected to Price Today
2016-08-11 09:58:34.334 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Expected to price today:

* Westpac Banking Corp (WSTP) Aa2/AA-, to price $bench 5-part
deal, via managers BAML/C/HSBC/MS
* 3Y, IPT +90 area; 3Y FRN, IPT equiv
* 5Y, IPT +100 area; 5Y FRN, IPT equiv
* 10Y, IPT +125 area
* Standard Chartered PLC (STANLN) Ba1/BB-, to price $bench
144a/Reg-S Perp/NC5 contingent convertible AT1, via
BAML/DB/GS/SG/SCB/UBS; IPT 8.00% area; guidance 7.625% area

LATEST UPDATES

* Israel Electric (ISRELE) Baa2/BBB-; said to hire C, JPM for
at least $500m bond sale in 4Q

MANDATES/MEETINGS

* Sumitomo Life (SUMILF) A3/BBB+; investor mtg July 19
* Woori Bank (WOORIB) A2/A-; mtgs July 11-20

M&A-RELATED

* Analog Devices (ADI) A3/BBB; ~$13.2b Linear Technology acq
* To raise nearly $7.3b debt for deal (July 26)
* Bayer (BAYNGR) A3/A-; said to review Monsanto (MON) A3/BBB+
accounts as bid weighed (Aug. 4)
* $63b financing said secured w/ $20b-$30b bonds seen
* Danone (BNFP) Baa1/BBB+; ~$12.1b WhiteWave (WWAV) Ba2/BB
* Co. Says deal 100% debt-financed, expects to keep IG
profile (July 7)
* Thermo Fisher (TMO) Baa3/BBB; ~$4.07b FEI acq
* $6.5b loans, including $2b bridge (July 4)
* Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) Baa3/BBB; ~$1b LDR acq
* Plans $750m issuance post-completion (June 7)
* Air Liquide (AIFP) A3/A-; ~$13.2b Airgas acq
* Plans to refi $12b loan backing acq via USD/EUR debt
(June 3)
* Great Plains Energy (GXP) Baa2/BBB+; ~$12.1b Westar acq
* $8b committed debt secured for deal (May 31)
* Abbott (ABT) A2/A+; ~$5.7b St. Jude buy, ~$3.1b Alere buy
* $17.2b bridge loan commitment (April 28)
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A; ~$9.3b Valspar buy
* $8.3b debt financing expected (March 20)
* Shire (SHPLN) Baa3/BBB-; ~$35.5b Baxalta buy
* Closed $18b Baxalta acq loan (Feb 11)

SHELF FILINGS

* IBM (IBM) Aa3/AA-; automatic mixed shelf (July 26)
* Nike (NKE) A1/AA-; automatic debt shelf (July 21)
* Potash Corp (POT) A3/BBB+; debt shelf; last issued March
2015 (June 29)
* Tesla Motors (TSLA); automatic debt, common stk shelf (May
18)
* Debt may convert to common stk
* Reynolds American (RAI) Baa3/BBB filed automatic debt shelf;
sold $9b last June (May 13)
* Statoil (STLNO) Aa3/A+; debt shelf; last issued USD Nov.
2014 (May 9)
* Corporate Office (OFC) Baa3/BBB-; debt shelf (April 12)
* Rogers (RCICN) Baa1/BBB+; $4b debt shelf (March 4)

OTHER

* Visa (V) A1/A+; CFO says will issue $2b debt for buybacks by
yr end (July 21)
* Saudi Arabia (SAUDI); said to have hired 6 banks to lead
first intl bond sale (July 14)
* Investment Corp of Dubai (INVCOR); weighs bond sale (July 4)
* Alcoa (AA) Ba1/BBB-; upstream entity to borrow $1b (June 29)
* GE (GE) A3/AA-; may issue despite no deals this yr (June 1)
* Discovery Communications (DISCA) Baa3/BBB-; may revisit bond
market this yr, BI says (May 18)
* American Express (AXP) A3/BBB+; plans ~$3b-$7b term debt
issuance (April)

FX

August 11th, 2016 6:27 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Sterling Struggles to Find a Bid, While RBNZ Can’t Knock Kiwi Down

  • The US dollar has found steadier footing today after trading heavily yesterday
  • The RBNZ delivered a 25 bp cut in the cash rate and NZD rallied
  • We think the risk of a supply agreement among OPEC and non-OPEC members next month is low
  • There are a few economic reports from the US and Canada today, but nothing that is likely to move the markets ahead of tomorrow’s retail sales
  • Korean and Philippine central banks kept policy steady, as expected
  • Banco de Mexico is expected to keep rates steady at 4.25%; the Peruvian central bank is expected to keep rates steady at 4.25%

The dollar is mixed against the majors.  The dollar bloc is outperforming while sterling and the euro are underperforming.  EM currencies are broadly weaker.  RUB and MXN are outperforming while KRW and TWD are underperforming.  MSCI Asia Pacific was down 0.2%, with the Nikkei falling 0.2%.  MSCI EM is down 0.1%, possibly breaking a string of five straight up days, with Chinese markets falling 0.3%.  Euro Stoxx 600 is up 0.3% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a higher open.  The 10-year UST yield is up 1 bp at 1.52%.  Commodity prices are mixed, with oil narrowly mixed, copper up 0.2%, and gold down 0.2%.

The US dollar has found steadier footing today after trading heavily yesterday.  There are two main themes.  The first is sterling’s heavy tone.  After closing the North American session 0.5% higher yesterday to snap a five-day losing streak, it has come under new pressure today.  

The ostensible trigger was the RICS house price balance, which slumped to 5% from a revised 15% in June (initially 16%).  It is the lowest reading in three years.  It plays on concerns that commercial and residential property prices are not waiting to see if the bookmakers who have reportedly tightened up the odds that Article 50 is not triggered until 2018, if at all, are correct.  

Also, there seems to be an asymmetrical response by sterling.  The market seems more eager to sell sterling on disappointing news than to buy it on favorable news.  There was much trepidation, for example, over the third leg of this week’s bond buys, and it was for the longest duration.  It went off without a hitch, but sterling slipped back down to finish just above $1.30.  Sterling has not closed below $1.30 since July 8.  Intraday resistance is seen in around $1.3025.  

On the other side of the spectrum is New Zealand.  The Reserve Bank of New Zealand delivered a 25 bp cut in the cash rate, and the New Zealand dollar rallied.  It shot up from near $0.7200 to $0.7340 in less than five minutes.  It has since trended lower, and ahead of the start of the North American session, it is trading near $0.7240.

Not only was the rate cut widely anticipated, but in recent days, there was talk of the chances of a 50 bp rate cut.  The derivatives market appeared to discount about a 20% chance of a 50 bp move, which Governor Wheeler indicated he did not seriously consider.  The RBNZ’s path for the 90-day bill implies a trough in the official cash rate of 1.50-1.75% rather than 2% previously.   This is a little above what the market prices implied.  Still, officials made it clear that the strength of the currency was a challenge.  By suggesting that the inflation target is more important than ever, it points market participants to data that they must pay particular attention to going forward.  

With today’s pullback, the euro has retraced 38.2% of the post-US jobs report rally.  That retracement is found near $1.1135.  The next retracement is $1.1120, which also corresponds to the 20-day moving average.  It looks as if today’s pullback is over or nearly so, and regaining the $1.1160 level could spur the euro for a running start at $1.12 again.  

The news stream remains stuck in the summer lull, but following Norway earlier in the week, Sweden reported firmer than expected consumer prices.  The 0.1% rise in July is the third consecutive increase, the longest advancing streak in two years.  The year-over-year pace edged up to 1.1%, the highest in four years.  

The underlying rate of inflation in Sweden is not what is often thought of as a core measure (excluding food or energy or both) but is calculated using fixed mortgage interest rates.  By that measure, the year-over-year pace is 1.4%, down from 1.5% in June.  It remains near its highest levels in five years.  

The takeaway is it appears that rising consumer inflation reduces pressure on the respective central banks to ease policy, and both currencies are appreciating against the euro.  Today is the third session that the Swedish krona is gaining against the euro and the sixth in the past nine sessions.  The euro is only slightly lower today against the Norwegian krone after falling 1.1% yesterday.  Its losing streak is extending into the fourth session.  The euro has only risen against Nokkie in two of the past 10 sessions.  

It may be worth noting that the krona’s firmer tone has materialized despite the heaviness of oil prices.  Brent is off 0.4% today after completely unwinding Monday’s 2.5% rise on Tuesday and Wednesday.  News that OPEC output rose 150k barrels in July, with Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and UAE producing record amounts took a toll after the US reported a one million barrel inventory build while the expectations for were a drawdown of 1.5 mln barrels.      

We think the risk of a supply agreement among OPEC and non-OPEC members next month is low.  Ironically, lack of funding (which is partly related to some continued US sanctions) may be slowing Iran’s efforts to boost oil output as quick as it can.  In turn, without regaining pre-embargo levels of output, Iran cannot abide by an output freeze.  Another observation is an insight from game theory.  If an oil producer anticipated that there might be a freeze in output in the coming period, it would make sense to boost output first.  

There are a few economic reports from the US and Canada today, but nothing that is likely to move the markets.  The US reports July import prices.  A decline much larger than 0.4% could impact expectations for tomorrow’s PPI report.  Weekly jobless claims are the closest thing to a real-time report on the US labor market.  Next week’s report will be more important as it covers the week of the nonfarm payroll survey.  

Tomorrow the US reports retail sales.  Auto sales improved more than expected in July and that will keep the headline firm.  The GDP component is expected to rise 0.3% after two months of 0.5% increases.  Consumption in Q2 rose over 4%.  Some moderation in Q3 is expected, with investment picking up some slack, and the inventory headwind diminishing.    

Separately, Canada reports new house prices.  A 0.3% increase is expected in June after a 0.7% rise in May.  It would probably keep the year-over-year rate near 2.7%.  

The Philippine central bank kept rates steady at 3.0%, as expected.  July CPI was steady at 1.9% y/y, and is still below the 2-4% target range.  Its inflation forecasts for 2016 and 2017 were both lowered to 1.8% and 2.9%, respectively.  For now, the bank is on hold but it is leaning more dovish.  It said today that cutting reserve requirements is a “live proposal” that’s being studied.  

Bank of Korea kept rates steady at 1.25%, as expected.  July CPI rose a lower than expected 0.7% y/y vs. 0.8% in June.  This is still well below the 2.5-3.5% target range.  We do not think the 25 bp rate cut in June was “one and done” and so we see further easing this year.  Governor Lee noted that it still has policy room.  Officials appear to be getting more concerned about won strength, and that may eventually be the deciding factor behind a rate cut.

Banco de Mexico is expected to keep rates steady at 4.25%.  July CPI came in at 2.65% y/y, lower than expected but still the highest rate since February.  While still in the bottom half of the 2-4% target range, inflation has been accelerating as core CPI and PPI also suggest rising price pressures.  As such, we think there are growing chances of another rate hike this year.  Ahead of the decision, Mexico reports June IP, which is expected to rise 0.6% y/y.

The Peruvian central bank is expected to keep rates steady at 4.25%.  CPI rose a lower than expected 2.96% y/y in July.  This brings inflation back within its 1-3% target range.  If the current disinflation continues, we think it will likely cut rates near year-end or early 2017.

Death Spiral

August 11th, 2016 6:15 am

Via The Hill.com:

By Sarah Ferris – 08/11/16 06:02 AM EDT

The next president could be dealing with an ObamaCare insurer meltdown in their very first month.

The incoming administration will take office just as the latest ObamaCare enrollment tally comes in, delivering a potentially crucial verdict about the still-shaky healthcare marketplaces.

The fourth ObamaCare signup period begins about one week before Election Day, and it will end about one week before inauguration on Jan. 20. After mounting complaints from big insurers about losing money this year, the results could serve as a kind of judgment day for ObamaCare, experts say.

“The next open enrollment period is key,” Larry Levitt, president of the Kaiser Family Foundation said.

The Obama administration has struggled for several years to bring young, healthy people into the marketplaces, which is needed to offset the medical costs of older and sicker customers.

These problems are coming to light this year, as insurers get their first full look at ObamaCare customer data. Some, like UnitedHealth Group, say they’ve seen enough, and are already vowing to leave the exchanges.

Levitt and other experts warn that if the numbers don’t improve this year, more insurers could bolt. That would deal a major blow to marketplace competition, while also driving up rates and keeping even more people out of the exchanges.

Already, many insurers this year are proposing substantial rate hikes with the hopes of making up for higher recent medical costs. The average premium increase next year is about 9 percent, according to an analysis of 19 cities by Kaiser Family Foundation. But some hikes are far higher: Blue Cross Blue Shield has proposed increases of 40 percent in Alabama and 60 percent in Texas.

Levitt said the premium hikes could be “just be a one-time market correction” in the still-new marketplace. But if insurers continue to lose money, it could be a sign of bigger problems.

Republican nominee Donald Trump has vowed to undo ObamaCare, but it could be a tough test for Hillary Clinton, President Obama’s potential Democratic successor.

Clinton has already laid out plans to help boost enrollment by making coverage more affordable for people who are still priced out of ObamaCare.

Like Obama, she vowed to invest in advertising and in-person outreach to help more people enroll. Clinton would also increase ObamaCare subsidies so that customers spend no more than 8.5 percent of their income on premiums – down from 9.5 percent under current law.

She has also proposed a tax credit of up to $5,000 per family specifically to offset rising out-of-pocket costs – a side effect of cheaper plans offered under ObamaCare.

But other experts say the problems could lie deeper and that it would take a major shift in ObamaCare’s customer base to offset those massive medical costs.

Insurers have fretted for years about lower-than-expected enrollment through ObamaCare.

Last year, more than 11 million people bought coverage through the exchanges. While that figure beat the Obama administration’s expectations for 2016, it’s a huge drop from the Congressional Budget Office’s initial projections that 21 million would be enrolled by that time.

Now, several high-profile insurers are raising new concerns about the healthcare law’s mix of customers, and questioning whether their companies can keep selling ObamaCare plans.

Part of those concerns stem from distrust of the Obama administration, after its key marketplace stabilization program – known as risk corridors – was too cash-strapped to pay back the insurers. In the first two years of the healthcare law, more insurers than expected have ended up with balance sheets in the red. As a result, the risk corridor pool was left with only about $1 to cover every $10 in claims.

But those risk corridor payments, as well as from a similar program called reinsurance, have played a major role in controlling costs for insurers.

A recent study by the nonprofit Commonwealth Fund found that medical claims were only 2 percent higher than insurers projected, after taking into account the reinsurance payments.

In some corners, though, insurer complaints are seen as fresh evidence that ObamaCare marketplaces are on the brink.

In the last month, two major insurers – Aetna and Anthem – both reversed course on their plans to expand in the marketplace. Now, all five of the nation’s largest insurers say they are losing money on the exchanges.

“From a policy point of view, we’re basically seeing the exchanges unravel,” said Michael Abrams, a healthcare strategist with Numerof & Associates who consults for insurers including UnitedHealthGroup.

“More than anything else, it’s a serious symbolic blow to ObamaCare,” he said.

The two companies’ abrupt decisions to pull back from ObamaCare have baffled healthcare experts. Both Aetna and Anthem had previously been optimistic about the marketplace, unlike UnitedHealth, which had been cautious from the start.

As recently as this spring, Anthem said it was “well-positioned” to stay in the marketplace and Aetna said it was in a “very good place.”

None of the top five companies – which also include UnitedHealth, Cigna and Humana – had been major players in the ObamaCare marketplace and are unlikely to cause sudden rate hikes for most customers. They’re also unlikely to have a major effect on competition next year, though some people could see rate hikes in the local markets where the carriers are exiting.

Some experts say the insurers’ moves this year could be part of a strategy to drive more changes to the marketplace over time.

 

United states drivers are surprised they never knew this. If you have less than 3 tickets, you better read this… Read More

“I’ve been dealing with insurance companies for many years, and it is often the case that insurance companies say, ‘Gee, things are horrible, business is horrible, we’re going to pull out,” said Leighton Wu, a professor of health policy at George Washington University.

“Some of it is a posturing thing, this is what companies do,” added Wu, who also sits on the board of the D.C. Health Exchange.“

Some insurers will say, ‘We’re unhappy, we’d like to get paid better.’”

IMF on Effectiveness of Negative Rates

August 11th, 2016 6:07 am

Via Bloomberg:
August 11, 2016 — 5:43 AM EDT

The European Central Bank may need to rely more on asset purchases for monetary stimulus as its negative interest rates approach the limit of their effectiveness, economists at the International Monetary Fund said.

While negative rates in the euro area have successfully eased financial conditions for banks and their customers — spurring a modest credit expansion that supports growth and inflation — they also squeeze bank profitability, Andy Jobst and Huidan Lin wrote in a blog post published on Wednesday. That risks reducing banks’ capacity to lend.

“Additional rate cuts could weaken the effectiveness of monetary policy,” the economists wrote. “Looking ahead, the ECB may need to rely more on purchases of assets.”

The ECB’s stimulus package includes 80 billion euros ($89 billion) a month of bond purchases, currently set to run through March 2017, as well as long-term loans to banks intended to spur lending to companies and households. The next policy decision is scheduled for Sept. 8.

 

Since the Frankfurt-based institution cut its deposit rate below zero in June 2014, becoming the first major central bank to start a negative-rate policy, economists and officials have debated how low it could go. After the Governing Council lowered the rate to minus 0.4 percent in March, President Mario Draghi acknowledged the consequences for banks and signaled that there is a limit to how far the rate can fall.
Tiering Option

In the research paper on which their blog is based, the authors identify tiering as one measure that would allow the ECB to reduce rates further while mitigating the impact on banks. That would involve exempting some cash from the negative rate — for example by excluding 75 percent of excess reserves, similar to the system at the Swiss National Bank where the deposit rate is minus 0.75 percent.

Draghi said in March that the Governing Council discussed tiering but opted against it because policy makers didn’t want to signal that rates could go ever lower.

Sub-zero rates are sometimes necessary to bring down real borrowing costs — nominal rates minus inflation — that can hold back investment and consumption, according to the IMF blog. Even so, the benefits diminish over time and future lending growth may be insufficient to offset declining interest margins in some countries.

“Further policy rate cuts could bring into focus the potential trade-off between effective monetary transmission and bank profitability,” the authors said. “Focusing on asset purchases would raise asset prices and aggregate demand, while also supporting bank lending. This would also facilitate the pass-through of improved bank-funding conditions to the real economy.”

IEA on Oil Prices

August 11th, 2016 6:02 am

Via WSJ:
By Summer Said
Aug. 11, 2016 4:00 a.m. ET
1 COMMENTS

The International Energy Agency on Thursday trimmed its forecast for the rise in global oil demand next year on a dimmer economic outlook, warning that the “massive” stock overhang is keeping a lid on crude oil prices.

In its closely watched monthly oil market report, the Paris-based energy watchdog said it expects global oil demand to grow by 1.2 million barrels a day in 2017, a decrease of 100,000 barrels a day compared with last month’s forecast and down by 200,000 barrels a day from this year.

“Some momentum will be lost in 2017 due to downgrades in economic growth projections, but the forecast expansion of 1.2 million b/d is still above-trend,” it said in the report.

Despite recent price drops, balances in the market show essentially no oversupply during the second half of this year. But subdued growth in refining activity and the massive overhang of stocks are keeping a lid on prices, it said.
Related

Commercial stocks of oil in countries belonging to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, OECD, increased by 5.7 million barrels in June and stood at a record 3.093 billion barrels by the end of the month, the IEA said.

The agency said that global oil supplies rose by 800,000 barrels a day in July on higher output from members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and producers outside the group.

OPEC, which now has 14 members since Gabon joined in June, saw its output rise 150,000 barrels a day in July, reaching an eight-year high of 33.39 million barrels on higher production from Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

Saudi Arabia ramped up to a record rate of 10.62 million barrels a day, while Iraqi crude production rose by 80,000 to 4.33 million barrels a day.

FX

August 11th, 2016 6:00 am

Via Kit Juckes at SocGen:

One massive typo in the weblink, one sharp move as Kiwi shorts scrambled for cover. One bond rally that has new British wind its sails. And a slow but steady search for yield that drives markets on. It’s a quiet August this year but one with a powerful theme. The age of ageing is a time when duration and yield matter more than ever before and a bit of risk is no disincentive.

<http://www.sgmarkets.com/r/?id=h1122fae5,17faf41e,17faf41f&p1=136122&p2=090207985d9edc6c4c8088c3fbdce5b3>

The RBNZ cut rates to 2% and indicated there is more to come, which initially prompted NZD/USD to rise by nearly 2% though it has now given back half that jump. The Bank of Korea left rates on hold and the currency fell. It’s August, so it’s not worth over-thinking any of this beyond to observe that a thoroughly-anticipated policy move certainly isn’t a one-way bet. And perhaps it’s still worth reiterating that in this market, yield trumps just about anything else. Less yield isn’t so bad, as long as you’ve got some.

On which note, there’s much hand-wringing in the UK as the front end of the Gilt curve turns negative and the Bank of England still struggles to buy bonds. It’s easier to buy 10s than Ultras, but that may just mean it’s slightly easier to persuade foreign holders of 10s to sell than domestic pensions funds, whose ability to match long-dated liabilities is getting ever more limited. The FX conclusion of the BOE buying bonds off foreigners is very simple and sterling-negative. Throw in a soft RICS housing survey released overnight and the pound’s woes don’t get any less. The bigger story is that this all screams at the government to tackle pension deficits, a growing output gap, weak infrastructure and for that matter weak productivity, with significant long-term fiscal easing. Which in the long-run would be sterling positive and in the short run just isn’t happening.

Today’s data calendar includes CPI in France, Sweden and Ireland, US jobless claims and Canadian house prices. As well as slower UK house price gains and softer demand in the RICS survey, we saw oil prices fall after US inventory data, which kept bond yields down globally but did take a bit of the spring out of the step of some EM currencies. Not enough to change the story however – if the Rand is the non-oil-sensitive EM FX bellwether, its 0.3% fall overnight can be weighed against a 16% gain so far this year against the dollar.

Tactically, as well as strategically, we’d like to stay short sterling here. CAD and RUB have failed to deliver for us, partly because of oil price softness and if you want to go on positioning for medium-term stability/strength in oil, short GBP/NOK is still the way forwards. We remain well-disposed towards SEK, but on the other side of the world AUD and NZD are in need of fresh catalysts to establish new trends or revive the old bearish one. EUR/USD remains stuck in its range and relative yields are not pointing one way or the other. At the margin, I’m wary of a push higher again. As for USD/JPY 100-105 may now see the summer out.

Japanification of 10 Year Gilts

August 11th, 2016 5:54 am

Via Bloomberg:
Gilt Yields Follow Japan as 10-Year Spread Shrinks to Record
John Ainger
johnainger
August 11, 2016 — 5:23 AM EDT

Yield premium has plunged since BOE announced more easing
U.K. 10-, 30-year bond yields fell to all-time lows this week

 

It’s the first week of the Bank of England’s revived bond-purchase plan and U.K. gilts are already storming down the path carved out by their Japanese peers.

The yield premium offered by 10-year gilts over similar-maturity Japanese bonds shrank to the lowest on record on Wednesday as the securities became the latest focal point in a global fixed-income rally that has pushed yields across developed markets ever-lower. The gains mirror the moves seen in German and Japanese bonds under their respective central bank’s quantitative-easing programs, which have sent benchmark yields in both nations below zero.

U.K. securities have been boosted by BOE stimulus designed to shield the economy following the nation’s decision to exit the European Union in June, supercharging a rally that has made the bonds the world’s best performers this year. U.K. 10- and 30-year yields fell to all-time lows this week, while those on some non-benchmark securities slid below zero, after a bumpy start to the revived asset-purchase program. That boosted speculation the central bank may need to pay higher prices to purchase enough gilts to meet its QE target.

“You have this global trend of yield curves trending lower,” said Benjamin Schroeder, a fixed-income strategist at ING Groep NV in Amsterdam. “Britain has this special case with Brexit of course, but there’s this trend globally.”

 

The yield on U.K. 10-year gilts was at 0.53 percent as of 9:51 a.m. London time on Thursday, after touching a record-low 0.512 percent the previous day. That compares with minus 0.105 percent on similar-maturity Japanese bonds, leaving the yield difference at 64 basis points. The spread, which was at 176 basis points as recently as April, narrowed to 63 basis points on Wednesday, the lowest on record, based on closing prices.

The U.K.’s yield spread over German bunds touched 64 basis points on Wednesday. the lowest since 2013.

More on Libor

August 10th, 2016 10:10 pm

Via Randall Forsyth at  Barron’s :

Amid the never-ending chatter about Federal Reserve interest-rate increases, the money markets have stealthily enacted one on their own.

The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, has risen by roughly a quarter percentage point in recent weeks, and it has nothing to do with Brexit. Coming changes in regulations affecting money-market mutual funds have pushed up the rate, which is the benchmark for many loans for businesses, municipalities and regular folks.

How the rise in Libor, which is up to just under 0.8%, will figure into the calculations when the Federal Reserve deliberates over its monetary policy next month is an open question. While it ponders whether to hike its overnight federal funds rate target (currently 0.25%-0.50%) by another 25 basis points (a quarter percentage point), the private sector already is paying an additional 22 basis points more on many business and adjustable-rate mortgage loans based on Libor in the past six weeks.

This is an unintended consequence of money-market fund reform, which takes effect on Oct. 14. On that date, money funds will effectively be more like short-term bond funds with a variable net-asset value instead of the constant $1.00 a share NAV that was their hallmark since their introduction in the 1970s. After the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008, the Reserve Primary Fund, the original money fund, famously “broke the buck” as a result of its holdings of Lehman commercial paper.

The new rules won’t apply to so-called government money funds, which stick to short-term Treasury or U.S. agency obligations. The transaction account linked to your brokerage or mutual-fund account may have been shifted to a government money fund as a result of that pending change.

As Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal reports, municipalities are being forced to pay higher interest costs on their short-term borrowings. Money funds have been bracing for the rule change for a long time, but the effects have only become apparent recently in the short-term money market as the effective date has come into the maturity range of three-month paper.

Citigroup analysts Vikram Rai and Jack Muller write that efforts by money funds to build liquidity in anticipation of liquidations on the Oct. 14 effective date have created a “vicious feedback loop.”

Money-fund managers have shortened maturities, eschewing longer paper in money market, they write. That has pushed up three-month Libor and commercial-paper rates, but money-fund investors haven’t benefitted much while the funds’ portfolios have stuck with lower-yielding shorter paper.

The Citi analysts expect an additional rise of five-to-10 basis points by Oct. 14. By year end, they expect three-month Libor to be up to 1.05%-1.10%, up from 0.623% on June 24—its recent low just after the Brexit vote.

This sharp rise in borrowing costs could be considered a stealth tightening by the Fed. But according to a research note by Goldman Sachs economist Zach Pandl, the rise in Libor is being more than offset by other factors resulting in easier financial conditions for the overall economy.

Goldman estimates 15%-20% of household debt and 25%-30% of business debt is linked to Libor. And for the latter, Libor already is below the floor set in many loan agreements, so a rise in the market rate won’t affect those loans’ cost.

In calculating the firm’s Financial Conditions Index, Goldman takes into account other factors. These include credit-quality spreads in the bond market and the equity market, which are alternative sources of financing for corporations.

According to Goldman’s FCI, the rise in Libor increased the cost of financing by all of two basis points since mid-June. But the rally in the credit markets reduced its FCI by seven basis points since then while the equity rally has lowered the gauge by 24 basis points. All told, the net reduction in financing costs has been 29 basis points, by Goldman’s reckoning.

Which may be the case for the firm’s corporate customers but for small businesses and households, it’s a different story. They don’t have the option of bringing a multi-hundred-million-dollar bond or stock offering to market. For them, whether the rate increase came from the action of the money market or the Fed is immaterial.

How will the Federal Open Market Committee weigh these factors next month? Will the strength of the stock and credit markets, the jobs data showing full employment by conventional measures and service-sector inflation climbing combine to bring about the long-promised rate hike? Or will the rise in Libor be viewed as a stealth tightening that did the Fed’s dirty work?

That’s just one of the questions investors hope will be answered by Fed Chair Janet Yellen when she speaks to the annual Jackson Hole confab on Aug. 26. In the meantime, the markets seem to be off on summer holiday ahead of her eagerly awaited address.

Joy for the Rentier Class and Luxury Car Dealers in Greenwich

August 10th, 2016 8:45 pm

Via Bloomberg:

Bonus Cuts for Traders, Dealmakers Said to Ease Slightly

 

Bonus pools for many Wall Street traders and dealmakers this year may not shrink as severely as expected just a few months ago, according to compensation consultant Johnson Associates Inc.

Incentive pay for fixed-income sales and trading may fall 10 to 15 percent this year, Johnson said in a report on Wednesday. In May, it had projected the drop will be 15 to 20 percent. For bankers handling corporate deals, pay will probably decline 5 to 15 percent. That, too, is slightly more optimistic than May’s estimate for 10 to 15 percent.

“We’re just not quite as negative as we were two or three months ago,” Alan Johnson, founder and managing director of the New York-based consultancy, said in a phone interview. The U.K. vote to leave the European Union, for example, may not erode revenue in the year’s second half as much as previously thought, he said. “Things have stabled out some.”

 

The less-bad outlook, no matter how incremental, is one of few positive signals recently for financial industry workers before managers make year-end decisions on compensation and staffing. Other signs are foreboding. Bank leaders have said they’ll keep focusing on cost cuts to combat stalling revenue, while asset managers face customer ire for lackluster returns. That’s been spurring firings and fund liquidations.

Three of the largest U.S. investment banks — Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley — slashed first-half compensation by the most in at least four years, according to filings in July. Goldman Sachs cut the average first-half compensation it set aside per employee by 29 percent to $168,650 through June 30.

Johnson Associates warned in the report that the impact of Brexit remains uncertain, potentially driving up costs and crimping revenue, particularly in the U.K. and Europe. Companies are starting to figure out how they’ll adjust their workforce, it said.

A Class of Permanent Renters

August 10th, 2016 8:42 pm

Via WSJ:
By Laura Kusisto
Updated Aug. 10, 2016 4:52 p.m. ET
328 COMMENTS

The housing recovery that began in 2012 has lifted the overall market but left behind a broad swath of the middle class, threatening to create a generation of permanent renters and sowing economic anxiety and frustration for millions of Americans.

Home prices rose in 83% of the nation’s 178 major real-estate markets in the second quarter, according to figures released Wednesday by the National Association of Realtors. Overall prices are now just 2% below the peak reached in July 2006, according to S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices.

But most of the price gains, economists said, stem from a lack of fresh supply rather than a surge of buyers. The pace of new home construction remains at levels typically associated with recessions, while the homeownership rate in the second quarter was at its lowest point since the Census Bureau began tracking quarterly data in 1965 and the share of first-time home purchases remains mired near three-decade lows.

The lopsided recovery has shut out millions of aspiring homeowners who have been forced to rent because of damaged credit, swelling student loans, tough credit standards and a dearth of affordable homes, economists said.

In all, some 200,000 to 300,000 fewer U.S. households are purchasing a new home each year than would during normal market conditions, estimates Ken Rosen, chairman of the Fisher Center of Real Estate and Urban Economics at the University of California at Berkeley.

“I don’t think we are in a normal housing market,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors. “The losers are clearly the rising rental population that isn’t able to participate in this housing equity appreciation. They are missing out on [a big] source of middle-class wealth.”

Anxiety about missed economic opportunities is a key driver of the anti-incumbent anger on both sides of the political spectrum that has shaken up the 2016 election season, helping fuel the insurgent presidential campaigns of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders.

“You have these people who can’t get housing, and it’s turning into this rage,” said Kevin Finkel, executive vice president at Philadelphia-based Resource Real Estate, which owns or manages 25,550 apartments around the U.S.

While economists expected the homeownership rate to begin edging up this year, the rate fell to a 51-year low of 62.9% in the second quarter from 63.4% in the same quarter last year.

The rate could fall to 58% or lower by 2050, according to a recent prediction by housing experts Arthur Acolin of the University of Southern California, Laurie Goodman of the Urban Institute and Susan Wachter of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

Long-term declines could erase gains made by middle-class Americans since World War II. Owning a home provides protection against rising rents and has been a key component of retirement saving and wealth creation.

“The default savings mechanism for American households has been homeownership,” Ms. Wachter said. “Today we have historic lows for young households in terms of ownership so they’re not getting on this path.”

That, in turn, can ripple throughout the economy. Homeowners often use home equity to pay for college tuition, vacations or home renovations, all of which help boost consumer spending. The mere knowledge that home values are rising can make consumers comfortable spending money other places, a process known as the wealth effect.

“We’re seeing a divide between the wealth of homeowners and the wealth of renters,” said Nela Richardson, chief economist at real-estate brokerage firm Redfin.

After peaking in July 2006, the Case-Shiller index plunged 27% over the next six years. Since then the recovery has been swift, particularly in markets with strong job growth and limited supply, creating problems for entry-level buyers in particular.

Across the country the recovery has been divided between strong West Coast markets and Texas, which have rebounded swiftly beyond their 2006 peaks, while prices from the Rust Belt to southern Florida may not return to those levels for decades.

Prices in the Boulder, Colo., metro area are 45% above their prior peak, while those in Dallas are 26% above their boom-time highs, according to data provider CoreLogic Inc. Meanwhile, prices in the Saginaw, Mich., area remain nearly 40% below their peak levels and those in Atlantic City are still 38% lower.

In Sacramento, prices have jumped 64% since the beginning of 2012, according to CoreLogic.

Sunny Kenner, a 40-year-old single mother who works for the county government and has rented for years, decided a few months ago she needed to buy before rising prices shut her out for good.

Ms. Kenner, who is looking for a two-bedroom house in the $250,000 range, has been trying for months but twice has been outbid by buyers with large cash reserves who bid $10,000 over the asking price. By the second day a house is on the market, she says, there are usually about half a dozen offers on it.

“The first time I didn’t get one of the houses, of course, I cried,” she said. “The second time I was just numb.” She said she wishes she had enough money to buy when prices hit bottom a few years ago. “I feel like I missed the boat.”

The main reason for falling homeownership, economists say: mortgage availability. Lenders chastened by the financial crisis have been fearful of making loans to borrowers with dings on their credit, student debt or credit-card bills, or younger buyers with shorter credit histories.

“I’m not sure that we’ll see some of those conditions change in any material way in the foreseeable future,” said Tim Mayopoulos, the president and chief executive officer of mortgage giant Fannie Mae, in an interview last week.

“Right now our mortgage finance system is still not working well for lower- and middle-income households and first-time buyers,” added Mr. Rosen.

A dearth of home construction, especially at the lower end, is taking a toll. Nationally, the inventory of homes for sale has dropped more than 37% since 2011, according to Zillow, a real estate information firm. Some of that reflects the clearing away of distressed inventory, but economists said the pendulum has swung toward a housing shortage.

An estimated 1 million new households were formed last year, but only 620,000 new housing units were built, according to the Urban Institute. An analysis of census data by the Urban Institute showed that all of the net new households formed between 2006 and 2014 were renters rather than owners.

In 2006 home builders produced 40% more single-family homes than the 30-year long-run average. Last year, by contrast, single-family home construction was still 30% below that mark, according to Census Bureau data.

“We went so many years without building there are in many places in the country a shortage of housing,” said Richard Green, the Lusk Chair in Real Estate at the University of Southern California. “I think that overshadows everything else in terms of normalcy.”

In the early years of the recovery only top earners could afford to buy homes, as new buyers struggled with joblessness or tarnished credit histories, so builders focused almost exclusively on the high-end.

“The entry-level buyer, up until recently, has not been that involved in buying houses,” said Dale Francescon, co-chief executive of Century Communities, a publicly traded builder that operates in four states. “That’s historically where a significant amount of the volume has come from.”

Even as first-time buyers have started returning to the market, many builders have been slow to respond. Building lower-priced homes means finding cheaper land, and that tends to be farther away from job centers on the suburban fringes.

Those areas were the hardest hit during the housing bust, and many investors have been hesitant to encourage builders to return. As a result, builders have tended to focus on ever-dwindling and increasingly expensive land in core areas, pushing up the prices.

Tom Farrell, director of business development for Landmark Capital Advisors, which counsels investors on real-estate projects, said risk appetite is low, particularly outside core markets.

“We’re often saying ’You all want to be in the same spot, and you’re tripping over each other,” he said. “It’s just difficult to get people out to those secondary markets.”